Office of the Press Secretary
(New York, New York)
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release October 12, 1998

REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT RECEPTION FOR PETER VALLONE
Waldorf Astoria Hotel
New York, New York

5:25 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. First of all, let me thank Mayor
Dinkins for his presence here tonight and his friendship and the many
things he did for the people of New York and the many things that he's
done for me over the years. And, Peter, I want to tell you that I
appreciate being invited to come by and be with your friends tonight and
your supporters. And thank you and Tina for making this race. And I
thank you for the personal support you have given me. I'm very grateful
for that.
Somebody answer that phone. (Laughter.)

And I'd also like to thank you for letting me -- I've got one
non-paying guest here tonight, my senior Senator from Arkansas, Dale
Bumpers, who's back there. (Applause.) He is universally considered to
be the best speaker in the United States Senate, so if we were really
being generous, I'd let him talk and I'd sit down tonight. But I'll
pull rank a little bit.

I want to make a couple of points, if I might. First of all, our
country is in good shape. Compared to six years ago, we are in much
better shape. We've got the first surplus in 29 years and the smallest
percentage of people on welfare in 29 years and the lowest unemployment
rate in 28 years, the lowest crime rate in 25 years, the highest home
ownership in history. That's the good news.

But the important thing is that at this moment we can't just sit
around and enjoy that. We have to build on it. This is a record to
build on, not to sit on, because we live -- as everybody in New York
City knows, here, the financial capital of our country, we are living in
a very dynamic world. And there are a lot of things going on out there.
Some of them are good and some of them are quite challenging.

Not only that, there are a lot of challenges we haven't met here
at home. And the reason that we're back in Washington working on this
budget now, trying so hard -- here we are just three weeks before an
election -- to get a budget passed, and this is the first time in 24
years that the United States Congress has not passed a budget resolution
with their own budget plan. But the reason we're doing it is because we
know we still have big challenges out there.

We have got -- just to take one example that's very important to
New York -- we have got to keep the economic growth going by maintaining
our leadership in the global economy and stabilizing all these troubles
elsewhere; otherwise, they'll come back here to hurt us. That's what
this International Monetary Fund issue is all about.

We have got to expand economic opportunity into the poorest
inner-city neighborhoods and rural areas in this country which haven't
received them. Secretary Cuomo, from New York, the HUD Secretary, has
got a great program up there that he and the Vice President put together
to get more investment into those areas. And for the last four days, if
you've been paying attention to the news, you know I've been involved in
a pitched battle trying to pass the education plan that I sent to
Washington -- to Congress in January, for smaller classes in the early
grades, for modernizing and building 5,000 schools, to hooking up all
our classrooms to the Internet, to giving children after-school and
summer school programs and mentoring programs for middle school kids
from troubled neighborhoods so they can know they can go on to college
if they settle down and do a good job in school.

We're fighting a huge battle that Senator Bumpers has really
helped us on, on the environment, where every year now -- every single
year -- we have to look at 10 or 15 bills having nothing to do, very
often, with the environment, being littered with what they call riders
in Washington, designed to undermine America's commitment to
environmental protection at the very time when we know more than we ever
have before about how to grow the economy and improve the environment.

We didn't succeed in passing the patient's bill of rights, but we
need to keep working until we do because I think if someone gets hit,
God forbid, going out of this hotel tonight by a car, you shouldn't have
to go all the way across town to an emergency room just because that's
the only one covered by your HMO. If your doctor tells you you need a
specialist, you ought to be able to get it. And you ought to know that
your medical records are private. Those are just some of the things
we're trying to do.

Now, what's that got to do with the governor's race? A lot. The
answer is a lot. There are some things that the President can do that
will affect the country as a whole, independent of what is going on in
the communities of America, the cities of America, or the states of
America. You know, I have to get this International Monetary Fund
funding passed. I have to come up with a plan to -- in my judgment --
reform the global financial system so that we avoid some sort of
catastrophe here. That's my job. Tonight, my special envoy for Kosovo,
Dick Holbrooke, is briefing our NATO allies about what we're trying to
do to make peace in Kosovo. Those are things that the President only
can do.

But in education, in crime control -- when we passed the Crime
Bill to put 100,000 police on the street, that money went through the
governors and the mayors. If we pass a bill in the Congress to put
100,000 teachers in the classroom, that money will go through the
governors, and to some extent, the large local school districts.

But the governors of this country have primary responsibility in
so many areas -- relating to education, relating to law enforcement,
relating to the environment, relating to economic growth in a specific
area. And if you look at Peter Vallone's record here in New York City,
I defy you to find another city official anywhere else in America who
has been as innovative in three things that all go to together:
improving education, fighting crime, and being responsible with the
budget. You will not find a better record of reform from any big-city
official anywhere in the United States. And I think that is very
important. (Applause.)

Now, why is that important? Because whatever we do in Washington,
it has to be made live on the streets of America, in the communities and
in the states. And I can tell you -- I was a governor for 12 years, I
know a little about that job. And as we move into this next period of
our nation's history, we have given you the smallest federal government
in 35 years. We have focused far more on empowering the American people
to solve their own problems and less on setting up new bureaucracies.

But we have also given big, big new responsibilities to the
states. The governors will have more to do than anybody else with
whether we really succeed in adding 5 million children to the ranks of
those with health insurance. The governors will have a great deal to do
with deciding whether all these funds we're trying to get in education
actually lift the learning of our children all across America. And I
could go on and on and on.

So I'm here not just because this man is my friend and he has
stood up for me, but because, far more important, he has stood up for
and led the people of New York City in an exemplary way, in a reformist
way, building a better future for our children.

And let me just make one last point that's very much on my mind
today. I'm sure that most of you saw in the press that the young man
who was beaten so badly in Wyoming passed away today. We don't know the
facts of the case and none of us should comment on them or prejudge
anyone. But the indications are that he was beaten so badly because he
was gay, by people who were either full of hatred or full of fear or
both. And yet if you think about it, the thing that's special about
America is that we're supposed to create a place for every law-abiding
citizen in this country, no matter how different we all are one from
another -- by race, by religion, by circumstance, by neighborhood -- no
matter what.

One of the things I have tried hardest to do as President -- I
think with more success in the country than in Washington, D.C -- is to
reconcile Americans to one another and to make us all understand that we
don't have to be afraid of each other if we share the same values,
follow the same rules, and are committed to building the same kind of
future. That's another reason I'd like to see Peter Vallone have a
chance to serve as governor, because I think he's that kind of person.